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Tensegrity and mechanoregulation: from skeleton to cytoskeleton

Christopher S Chen, Donald E Ingber
Key takeaways
  1. 01Tensegrity structures use continuous tension and local compression
  2. 02This principle applies from the skeleton to the cytoskeleton
  3. 03Mechanical forces are transmitted down to the cellular level
  4. 04Cells convert mechanical stress into biochemical signals
  5. 05Internal "prestress" tunes the cell's mechanical response

The body uses a "tensegrity" structure, from skeleton to cell, to translate mechanical forces into biochemical signals that regulate cell behavior.

Abstract

Objective: To elucidate how mechanical stresses that are applied to the whole organism are transmitted to individual cells and transduced into a biochemical response.

Design: In this article, we describe fundamental design principles that are used to stabilize the musculoskeletal system at many different size scales and show that these design features are embodied in one particular form of architecture that is known as tensegrity.

Results: Tensegrity structures are characterized by use of continuous tension and local compression; architecture, prestress (internal stress prior to application of external force), and triangulation play the most critical roles in terms of determining their mechanical stability. In living organisms, use of a hierarchy of tensegrity networks both optimizes structural efficiency and provides a mechanism to mechanically couple the parts with the whole: mechanical stresses applied at the macroscale result in structural rearrangements at the cell and molecular level.

Conclusion: Due to use of tensegrity architecture, mechanical stress is concentrated and focused on signal transducing molecules that physically associate with cell surface molecules that anchor cells to extracellular matrix, such as integrins, and with load-bearing elements within the internal cytoskeleton and nucleus. Mechanochemical transduction may then proceed through local stress-dependent changes in molecular mechanics, thermodynamics, and kinetics within the cell. In this manner, the entire cellular response to stress may be orchestrated and tuned by altering the prestress in the cell, just as changing muscular tone can alter mechanical stability and structural coordination throughout the whole musculoskeletal system.

Cite this study
APA
Christopher S Chen, & Donald E Ingber (1999). Tensegrity and mechanoregulation: from skeleton to cytoskeleton. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/tensegrity-and-mechanoregulation-from-skeleton-to-cytoskeleton/
MLA
Christopher S Chen, and Donald E Ingber. "Tensegrity and mechanoregulation: from skeleton to cytoskeleton." 1999, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/tensegrity-and-mechanoregulation-from-skeleton-to-cytoskeleton/.
Chicago
Christopher S Chen, Donald E Ingber. 1999. "Tensegrity and mechanoregulation: from skeleton to cytoskeleton.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/tensegrity-and-mechanoregulation-from-skeleton-to-cytoskeleton/